Showing posts with label questions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label questions. Show all posts

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Questions without answers



 
Last Sunday, I had a member of our congregation confront me by the back door after church because we’d read the story of Adam and Eve, the serpent, and the fruit of the tree of knowledge, and she was damned if she was going to let women be blamed for all the evil in the world anymore.  Later that morning, we had our Lenten book study, and afterward, another of our members sent me an email questioning an overly simplistic statement I’d made about evil, as it confronts us in events like the Nazi genocide of the Jews.  And then, there was another incident this week in our ongoing internal struggle over whether and how to appropriately respond to the political crisis in our country; a certain mass email had gone out sounding the alarm about various laws being introduced in congress, and someone got in touch with me to raise concern, because she erroneously thought it had been sent using the church’s email list. 
Now, I’m not complaining about any of this.  I would rather be in a community where people feel free to say what’s bothering them than one where they do not.  And I’d rather be wrestling with difficult questions about misogyny in the Bible, and the power of evil in human affairs, and how to handle politics in the parish, than doing some of the other stuff I do every day.  So if there is more ferment going on right now at St. John’s, and folks are more inclined than usual to speak out, as also seems to be the case around town, and all over the country, I experience that, on the whole, as a good thing.  When that person went off last Sunday about the Book of Genesis I started laughing, not because I thought she was being ridiculous, but because it made me happy that someone trusted me enough to say what she really thinks and didn’t tone down her opinion or apologize for what she said.
No, the hard part, for me, is that I feel like I’m supposed to have the answer.  I take these objections seriously, because I know that they are coming from a genuine desire to understand.  People are speaking out because they want help to make sense of intractable issues that demand to be confronted, in church, and society, and the depths of the human soul.  These are exactly the kind of questions our religion ought to be able to help us address but it’s not always clear how it does.  In fact, there are times when the Bible and the history of Christian tradition seem to give ambiguous answers, to say the least, or even to come down on what feels like the wrong side.   So people turn to their pastor to help them understand.  And that would be me.     
My role in this community is to be more than the chief administrator of the parish organization.  It is also more than to be a sacramental priest, administering the rites of the church.  I am also supposed to be a religious teacher.  So when someone raises an impassioned question about a weighty matter of life and death, good and evil, spirituality and ethics, I really should be able to give something more than just another half-baked personal opinion.  I don’t know if it is just me, or if other people really expect this (probably, a little of both), but I feel like I should be able say something authoritative, something wise, something that has the deep ring of truth about it, something that, if it doesn’t settle the question, at least clarifies it to some degree so that people can find their own way forward. 
Now I don’t want to sell myself short.  I suppose I am able to do that from time to time.  But there are plenty of other times when I feel like my abilities as a religious teacher are pretty inadequate.  And one way I can explain that to myself is in terms of the gaps in my scriptural and theological education.  Sometimes I look back on my college days, or all the years I spent farming and gardening, or studying Mahayana Buddhism, and I wish I’d known then what I know now, and had used my time differently.  But, then again, I’m not really so sure that having mastery of biblical Hebrew, or a thorough first-hand knowledge of the Church Fathers, would necessarily make that much of a difference.  Because, as Jesus reminds us this morning in the Gospel of John, truly becoming his disciple is not about being persuaded by an argument, or about putting together a coherent system of religious ideas. It is about being born from above. 
At least that is what Jesus says to Nicodemus, whom the Gospel describes as a leader of the Jews.  That is to say, he is a scholar of the scriptures, and an authoritative religious teacher.   But Nicodemus is in the dark.  We don’t know why he comes to Jesus in the night.  Maybe he wants to avoid being seen, because he’s ashamed about going to consult the young upstart teacher from Nazareth.  Maybe he knows there is something about this Jesus that he can’t put his finger on, and this not-knowing won’t let him sleep, so he goes to try to learn something that will set his mind at ease.  Whatever the case, Nicodemus begins his conversation with Jesus, not by asking a question, but by making a statement.  “This much,” says Nicodemus, “we know: we know that you are a teacher sent from God, with whom God is present, for we have seen the signs that you are doing.” 
Which is saying a lot, really, especially since we are used to thinking of the leaders of the Jews as Jesus’ sworn enemies.  But there’s an implied question here, even if Nicodemus himself isn’t sure what it is.  Somehow he understands that this is not the whole story, and he leaves it to Jesus to tell him something more.  So Jesus begins by running Nicodemus aground on the rocks of his own literal way of thinking.  And then he shows him what he has to gain by knowing him, not from a distance, nor by the outward signs.  Because Nicodemus is right—there is more.  And the author of John, who likely wrote these words to read aloud to the catechumens in the night before their baptism at Easter dawn, is also giving us the chance to be more—more than people who have joined a religion.  He is giving us the mind of the beloved, the one who lies close to the heart of the one who abides in the heart of God.
First of all, says John’s Gospel, this is not about acquiring new religious knowledge; it is about being transformed, about seeing the world with the eyes of God and, finally, being in God.  And this way of new birth that begins at baptism is essentially a path of not-knowing.  To follow it is to dance on the breath of the Spirit, and who knows where that comes from or where it is going?  Still, there is one thing we can we rely on—the testimony of the Son of Man, the one person we know whose whole life flows out from and back into God.  His teaching is confirmed by the signs that he gives, especially the supreme sign of giving himself to be lifted up on the cross.  But again, this self-giving is not simply an atoning sacrifice that happened once, long ago, out there somewhere—it is also the enduring object of transforming contemplation.  If we keep our inner eye fixed on the crucified and ascended Son of Man, he will heal the wound of knowledge bound to death, that knows nothing beyond it.
Finally, this is the path of trust in God’s love above all.  Faith in Jesus leads to the heart of God, because it is from God’s overflowing heart of love for the world that he came.  This is the key to receiving the testimony of John’s gospel as something other than an argument.  These are not words written to demand conversion to a new religion, or to prop up a theological system, but are the gift of a heart that has known God’s grace and truth.  They are words given to people who have already made the decision to follow Jesus, to help us realize the fullness of this path we’ve undertaken; to show us its glory in the depths and the densities of earth, and to carry us all the way to heaven.   They were written to bring us to our one true religious teacher—who is God.

Sunday, June 21, 2015

To the other side







I’ve just returned from a vacation trip to my brother’s wedding in Madison, Wisconsin, which began with four solid days of family gatherings and raucous festivities.  But when that was all over, my wife and daughter and I retreated to the home of Meg’s a college friend Pam.  And on our second day there we packed up our towels and bathing suits and a picnic lunch and brought along Joel, Pam’s younger son headed out of town to Devil’s Lake.
The sandy bottom of that lake stays shallow a long way out from the shore, so it’s a perfect place for children.  I played with the kids a bit, and then when I was satisfied that they were content with each other, I went to rent a stand-up paddle board from the concession by the beach.  I made a little voyage out into the middle of the lake before heading back in so that everyone else could have a turn.  Meg went for a cruise, and when she came back we let Risa and Joel take turns paddling around in the shallow water.
Then our hour was up, and I asked the kids if they wanted to ride on the front of the board while I paddled it back to the boat rental area.  They climbed on carefully and sat down while I shifted to the back to even the weight.  I paddled along slowly, skirting the crowd of bathers close to the shore.  We all had to concentrate on keeping as balanced as possible, because if one of us started leaning to one side, the weight of the others would accelerate us toward the tipping point.  By the same token, we had to be cautious not to overcorrect when we moved to right ourselves, and so spill over in the opposite direction. 
We made it to the beach at the boat rental area without capsizing, and it felt like a big relief.  But when you think about it, what was the worst that could have happened?  We would have tipped over and fallen into three or four feet of lake water, the same placid water we had been splashing and plunging and wading in just a few minutes before.  Something about riding on top of the paddle board and the illusion of mastery that it gave us changed the way we thought about that water.  From the precarious perspective of the deck of our little craft, it was no longer our cooling and refreshing friend—it was a dark peril to cross over using all our vigilance and skill.
The danger that the disciples of Jesus were in on that stormy night on the lake was very real.  Those waters were deep, and those men were quite familiar with them.  They knew how unexpectedly the squalls of wind could come down from cold heights of Mt. Hermon, and how quickly they could whip the surface up into dangerous waves.  So they must have been asking themselves what they were doing out there in the middle of the lake in the dark of night.
Well, the answer to that was easy—they were there because Jesus sent them.  Jesus said, “let’s go across to the other side,” and they went.  That’s what disciples do, after all—they trust the teacher and go where he tells them to go.  And insofar as we also are disciples of Jesus we are committed to doing the same.  We go where we think Jesus wants us to go, and at least part of what that means for us is that we go to church.  Now maybe we think that’s not a very risky thing to do.  This church building has been sitting here on this corner for 124 years, which has a reassuring ring to it.  Even the great earthquake of 1906 didn’t knock it down, so maybe it feels like a safe place where we are protected from the storms and tides and whirlpools of the world outside.
But the church is not some giant unsinkable cruise ship purring along high above the waves.  The massacre last Wednesday night at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina reminded us that the church is a little open boat, and in a storm the waves are liable to come in over the side.  Our society is being buffeted right now by a storm of unchecked gun violence and long-simmering racist hate, and it’s tempting to want to batten down the hatches and turn the ship around, to look for a safe harbor where we can stay warm and dry.  But Jesus says, “friends, let’s go across to the other side.”
We are accustomed to think of the church as a place of refuge from the ugliness and sickness of the world.  But the career of Jesus is a sustained engagement with the “other side” of human experience, the side we prefer not to think about.  You can see this especially clearly in the Gospel of Mark, which doesn’t contain a lot of long quotations of Jesus.  There is no Sermon on the Mount in Mark; there are no lengthy parables like the story of the Good Samaritan or the Prodigal Son.  What is in Mark are a lot of stories of the people that Jesus encountered along his way, and the things that he did and said to change their lives.  And what those encounters have in common it is that in them Jesus confronts some aspect of the human condition that we would rather not deal with.
The people who seek him out are the people we would rather not deal with.  They are the people we don’t want to know, or to become.  They are the sick, the outcast, the insane, the disabled.  They are the poor and the little children.   They are everyone who it is too much trouble, too time-consuming, inconvenient, and expensive to have to take care of.  Or if they are not, if they are people who have it all together, who are well-situated in society, and well-satisfied with themselves, Jesus’ encounters with them reveal their arrogance and self-righteousness.  He shows them their true colors, hidden under their cloak of prestige and respectability—the colors of envy, deceitfulness, and hate, and deadly violence.  Jesus shows them these things and he finds them turned against himself.
So following Jesus is no guarantee of worldly success, or even of survival.  The martyrs of Emanuel AME Church have proven that once again.  Following Jesus requires that we surrender all our illusions of invulnerability and control, and accept the full vulnerability of being human.  Sometimes it is all enough to make you wonder, like the disciples in the gospel, whether God is asleep, or simply doesn’t care.  But the journey across to the other side is not just a challenge to be met or a commandment to be obeyed—it is good news, and it comes with a promise.  This is the promise that in Christ God has come across to our side, to make this stormy journey with us.  That’s what “Emanuel” means, after all—God with us. 
The gospel is not just the story of Jesus’ encounters with a lot of sick and sinful people.  It is also the story of their encounters with him, encounters that bring a sudden end to the raging of the wind and waves, and to a great and mysterious calm.  The encounter with Christ does not leave us with a final answer to the human condition, but it does leave us with questions, planted like seeds in the center of our lives—questions about what we were afraid of, and what it might mean to have faith, and above all, the question “Who is this?” 
They are questions that transform the way we look at our journey.  They open up the possibility that there is another “other side” of human existence that we have scarcely begun to know, one that is fully human and at the same time divine.   They are questions that suggest that Jesus is leading us, not merely across social and racial and religious barriers, but also across the gulf between earth and heaven, between time and eternity, between death and life.  So the only response that is really fitting to the encounter with Christ is worship and praise.  But this is not worship in a spirit of triumphalism and certainty, but of awe and wonder.  It is thanksgiving that remains profoundly aware of the fragility and precariousness of human life, and of the mystery of God’s presence with us.  It is praise that is focused more on wrestling with the deep and life-giving questions than standing pat on the answers.  It is discipleship that knows that we are still in middle of our crossing, and that it is only by the gracious loving-kindness of God that we will make it to the other side.     


About Me

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Petaluma, California, United States
I am a priest in the Episcopal Church, and have been (among other things) an organic farmer and gardener, and a Zen monk. I have a lifelong interest in social and spiritual renewal on the basis of contemplative discipline, creative nonviolence, and ecological practice. In recent years my work has focused intensely on the responsibility of pastoral ministry in the humanistic, evangelical, and catholic branch of Christianity known as Anglicanism. I'm married with a daughter, and have three brothers and two parents.